Featured Article: Sapphic September

Mar. 10th, 2026 04:00 pm
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Image of an open folder on a desk, on the left is a polaroid containing an image of the Sapphic flag, which has a dark pink top stripe, a wide white center stripe, and a dark pink bottom stripe, in the center of the white stripe is a violet-colored flower. There is also plant shaped clips and a note that reads 'week 21, March 08 to March 14'. On the right is a paper that includes the text from Featured Article post, plus another plant shaped clip. The Fanlore logo is in the upper right corner.ALT

This week’s Featured Article is Sapphic September!

Sapphic September is an annual autumnal challenge focused on creating fanworks for wlw ships.  It began as a simple tag on Tumblr that morphed into a recurring challenge that has had different moderators taking up the mantle over the years.  In its current form, a month’s worth of prompts is provided to inspire fans.

To find out more about the history of this challenge, visit the Fanlore page!

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We value every contribution to our shared fandom history. If you’re new to editing Fanlore or wikis in general, visit our New Visitor Portal to get started or ask us questions here!

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Edit of Alicent and Rhaenyra staring at each other, with a faded image of their girlhood behind them. Overlaid text says: “Ship Sunday: Alicent Hightower / Rhaenyra Targaryen.”ALT

This Ship Sunday is focused on the pairing of Alicent Hightower/Rhaenyra Targaryen, also known as Rhaenicent, from the House of the Dragon fandom.

Many fans were drawn to their tempestuous relationship, and the slow dissolving of their friendship as they find themselves on the opposite sides of a civil war. In fact, many fans felt their relationship was the heart of the first two seasons of the show. Fans like to explore angst, Alicent’s religious guilt, and Rhaenyra’s sapphic exploration in their fanworks.

Is this your ship? Check out their Fanlore article, and add your favorite tropes to the page!

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We value every contribution to our shared fandom history. If you’re new to editing Fanlore or wikis in general, visit our New Visitor Portal to get started or ask us questions here!

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A speech bubble, "gratuitous foreign language" written in it, switching between different languages.ALT

For this Terminology Thursday, we’re exploring Gratuitous Foreign Language, a term used for fanfics written in English that incorporate non-English words, phrases, or dialogue throughout the story. This term is usually used critically, and is often directed at fanfics where the inclusion of a foreign language is show-offy, excessive, or just embarrassingly wrong. This typically appears in dialogue for characters of color or ESL (English as a second language) characters, who may “slip” into their native tongue, especially during emotional or intimate moments like sex scenes.

The main critique is that it’s generally unrealistic. Most multilingual people speak different languages with people who understand them, and unknowingly switching languages in the heat of the moment rarely happens in real life. When overused or done poorly, it can come across as fetishistic. That said, the use of foreign language in fanfiction isn’t inherently bad! It can be very effective for conveying setting, demonstrating language barriers between characters, or signifying shifts in tone or relationship dynamics (like with honorifics or Japanese dialects).

Have you encountered gratuitous foreign language in your fandom? Let us know in the comments, then check out the Fanlore page to learn more!

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We value every contribution to our shared fandom history. If you’re new to editing Fanlore or wikis in general, visit our New Visitor Portal to get started or ask us questions here!

Vignette - Fanlore.org

Mar. 4th, 2026 02:24 pm
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veteranfangirl:

Vignette - Fanlore.org

A vignette is a short piece of fanfic, but not of a rigid length such as a drabble. A vignette usually consists just of a single scene. One fan defines it as “a brief (500 to 1000 words) literary work, characterized by precision and delicacy of composition, usually descriptive of scene, manners or character.” [1]

How common the term is varies between fandoms: In the X-Files fandom, it is one of the classifications used by Gossamer, so it is very common there, as well as in older print zines where vignettes are often discussed. In other fandoms, terms like snippet or ficlet are more common.

Featured Article: World War II

Mar. 3rd, 2026 06:00 pm
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Red and White background. On the left is an image of soldiers walking across a snowy field. Text reads: "Featured Article, World War II" On the left is two large quotation marks and the text from from the featured article post.ALT

This week’s featured article is all about the popular setting of World War II in fiction and art.

Works set during this international conflict are typically either canonically set within WWII or historical AUs. A historical AU follows alternative universes, where characters from different settings are placed in the WWII era, much like how other works with sci-fi time travel elements would send a character from a modern setting back in time to WWII.

Most commonly WWII fanworks are focused on soldiers and the battlefield, while a smaller group of fanworks focus on nurses, medics, or those left behind at home.

Some examples of well-known fandoms set in or around WWII are Band of Brothers, The Book Thief, Call of Duty, Oppenheimer, Hellboy, and many more.

Head over to our Fanlore page to check out the expanded list of fandoms and example fanworks set in the era.

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An arched doorway with the constellation Draco on the righthand side. “Fanlore Monthly Editing Challenge“ is written on the left side. The background consists of a starry sky.ALT

Returning for 2026, Fanlore will have monthly editing challenges!

Each month, you can earn a shiny new badge for completing the editing task.

March’s editing challenge is archive external links on a page.

To find out more about how to participate in the monthly challenges, and how to claim your badges, please check out the challenge’s help page.

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We value every contribution to our shared fandom history. If you’re new to editing Fanlore or wikis in general, visit our New Visitor Portal to get started or ask us questions here!

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Gideon and Harrowhark walking side-by side, emerging from darkness. They are surrounded by a halo of bones.ALT

Griddlehark, or Gideon/Harrow, refers to the canonical femslash pairing of Gideon Nav and Harrowhark Nonagesimus in The Locked Tomb fandom. The Locked Tomb series is a science fantasy lesbian horror book series written by Tamsyn Muir and published between 2019 and 2022, with a fourth book upcoming.

Gideon and Harrow are the only two children in the Ninth House and grow up as childhood enemies. When they are teenagers, Harrow, a talented necromancer, compels Gideon to serve as her cavalier in a challenge to become a Lyctor, a powerful immortal necromancer. As they pass through the various trials and hardships of the challenges, unable to trust most of the other competitors, they are forced to work together. They gradually become closer until they forge an unbreakable bond. While some fans consider their relationship to be a prime example of the Enemies to Lovers trope, other fans assert that it might be more accurately described as “Enemies to Grudging Allies to Allies to Friends to It’s Complicated Don’t Ask.“

Are you a Griddlehark fan? Tell us about your favorite moment between them in the comments, and check out their page on Fanlore!

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We value every contribution to our shared fandom history. If you’re new to editing Fanlore or wikis in general, visit our New Visitor Portal to get started or ask us questions here!

Separation by W. S. Merwin

Mar. 10th, 2026 10:01 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
Your absence has gone through me
Like thread through a needle.
Everything I do is stitched with its color.


*******


Link
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
Jenn related everybody's lack of sleep, ending with a hopeful "So, you're not working tonight, right?"

Ah, no, I am working, and under no circumstances will I call out on the grounds that my dog is crazy.

Other than dementia, which she shows no signs of (the dog, not my sister... I mean, not her either, but that's not what I'm talking about), what could cause this sudden barking spree in an otherwise pretty quiet doggie?

****************


Read more... )

Fucking fuck

Mar. 11th, 2026 09:54 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
Link to a sample letter/email

A friend let me know about a new Bureau of Prisons guideline for treatment of inmates with gender dysphoria, which you can read in its entirety here. The short form is that they're denying trans inmates gender-affirming care despite medical consensus, and substituting conversion therapy, which has been proven to be harmful and does not in any way "cure" gender dysphoria

40.

Mar. 11th, 2026 08:48 pm
hannah: (Rob and Laura - aureliapriscus)
[personal profile] hannah
Despite bad sleep last night, I got up and got going this morning. I ran just over 2.3 miles in 30 minutes as a new personal record, and took the stairs up to the gym also. I visited an ear-nose-throat specialist and was told I don't need to panic, and hearing it from a professional makes that a good deal easier. I went to a coffee shop on Madison Avenue that was fancy by Madison Avenue standards, got a vanilla latte and a glass of orange juice that were unfortunately both worth the high price tag, wrote some in my notebook, deliberately overtipped, and rode a bike back through Central Park.

I cooked monster sauce for the first time in a long time - so called because it's doctored up out of spare parts. A can of this, half a can of that. Some of this, more of that. It's always tomato based and it's about the only thing I make entirely on vibes. I ate it a lot in grad school, but haven't for years. The timing seemed right to do it tonight.

I did some editing and managed to get my stuff together enough to send out a query letter. I'm gearing up to wait for the rejection while also reminding myself any submission is a good one to stay in practice for the task.

I've gotten lovely notes and great cards, and all that would make it a good birthday. But all that could have gone aside and it'd still be a wonderful birthday. Because some weeks ago, I preordered an album and it arrived today. An album I'd waited weeks for, and months, and an album I could say I waited years for without knowing it. Because for well over a decade, I'd specify the difference between my favorite band presently making music and my favorite band no longer making music. And now I can't make that distinction quite so easily anymore.

Because after 19 years, Voxtrot released their second album.

19 years ago, I was in college. I was looking out towards the Pacific Ocean, drinking a jack and coke because that's what I'd been able to get the courage to buy for myself. I hadn't written any novels, or any fics of substantial length, either. I'd barely learned how to finish what I'd started.

19 years ago, I'd only seen the world end once.

This isn't an album the band could've made back then. They didn't have the broader maturity or experience on display here. It's still Voxtrot, beautifully so, and it's as rich and tasty and filling as ever. I don't know how I'd have taken it if they'd released it 17 years ago, 15, 10. Nineteen years. I've traveled the world and seen it end and seen it come back. I've said goodbye to people without knowing it was the last time, and welcomed more into my life. I've gone dancing and singing and been kissed a few times. There's things I'd change about the last 19 years, and few of them are about my life and what I've been doing.

It took Voxtrot 19 years to make another finely cut gem of an album that I think is better than their first.

I hope it doesn't take them another 19 years.

wednesday reads

Mar. 11th, 2026 05:26 pm
isis: starry sky (space)
[personal profile] isis
What I've recently finished reading:

The Princess Bride by William Goldman, which - I might have read years and years ago? Or I might have seen the movie (though I don't remember doing so)? Or maybe I just knew a lot about it by osmosis and because of the way certain things about it became memes, so I thought I had read it, but really never had. I don't know. Anyway, I read it because I wanted something light and silly to counteract recent more difficult reading and even more difficult current events, and it fit the bill.


Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir, which I read and enjoyed despite DNFing The Martian due to finding it powerfully boring. (I liked the movie version! I think the story was fine, but the various supporting characters all felt like cardboard cutouts to me.) Here, the initial hook - the POV character waking up with amnesia on what he eventually determines is a spaceship - was very much up my alley, a trope I love! The various supporting characters that appeared in the flashbacks were definitely better than cardboard cutouts, though sometimes they felt a bit stock. However, they ultimately weren't very important, and I really bought into the book with gusto when...

Okay, I read this book basically unspoiled, in that I knew that the main character was on a desperate space mission to save Earth from some sort of extinction event, but that was it. So I'm going to spoiler-cut the rest, just in case someone reading this hasn't read this book, so that you may have the same experience I had.
Spoiler spoiler spoiler!Okay, if you have been reading my book posts for a while, you know that I am a big fan of stories about human-alien encounters. My last books post included a review of Adrian Tchaikovsky's Shroud, and I mentioned that it reminded me a little of Dragon's Egg by Robert L. Forward, in the sense that it starts with an environment which is the opposite of anything humans would expect to find life on, and reasons out from physics and chemistry what life might be like in that environment. But really, Tchaikovsky's approach to human-alien encounters is more adversarial and combative, and probably more realistic, than Forward's. Here, there's also an alien whose form and manner is reasoned out from the conditions of the planet where it developed, but its interactions with the human are more Forwardian than Tchaikovskian. Both the alien and the human are mindful that they are there for the same reason - to save their respective civilizations - and they approach their interactions carefully and with much forethought, for the most part.

There are still misunderstandings and near-fatal disasters and scary adventures, enough to make it a compelling, engaging read. I thought the ending was perfect, and I look forward to seeing the movie eventually! In conclusion, ROCKY MY BELOVED ♥♥♥


The Unicorn Hunter by Katherine Arden, which I read as e-ARC from NetGalley. Arden's One True Story (based on the books by her I've read) is that of a woman constrained by her sex and her circumstances who strives for the agency to direct her own life and protect what she cares about. This book is about a slightly-fantasy alternate-universe Anne of Brittany, who chafes against the fate she and her country are headed for: she will be forced to marry the King of France, bringing Brittany for annexation as her dowry.

To avoid this, in desperation she arranges a secret betrothal to France's enemy, the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilien. However, in this version of the world, rulers have diviners who can discern events happening at a distance, and send messages back and forth; to keep it secret, she holds the proxy wedding in the enchanted forest of Brocéliande, which diviners can't penetrate at risk of madness. And there she sees a unicorn, and brings a diviner who disappeared in the forest centuries ago out into the "real" world, setting in motion a chain of events which blur the boundaries between her real kingdom of Brittany and the mysterious otherworld of the "kerriganed", the faerie people of Breton folklore.

If you squint you can see elements of both the Winternight Trilogy and The Warm Hands of Ghosts; a forthright woman who doesn't behave as she should according to the strictures of the day, a figure from a shadowy world who may have ulterior motives, the subtle mix of a realistic world and a fantastical one. Anne is a wonderful heroine who deliberately leads her opponents to underestimate her, who pursues her aims and protects her family with great courage. I really enjoyed this book, especially the afterword in which Arden talks a little about the real Anne, and the real Brittany, and the folkloric Brittany that inspired her.


"The Colorado River Does Not Reach 2030" by Len Necefer and Teal Lehto, on Substack. This is a short story in the form of a news article, in the author's words:
What follows is a work of near-future fiction. It is not a prediction. It is a scenario built from conditions that are measurable today: Lake Powell is at 26% capacity and falling, snowpack at record lows, seven states deadlocked on water allocation, and a federal agency that has been gutted of the expertise needed to manage the crisis. // Every element in this scenario is drawn from published science, existing legal disputes, or political dynamics already in motion. Some characters are composites, some are real. The timeline is compressed. The chain of events is plausible. The unsettling part is how little I had to invent.
It's cli-fi in the model of Kim Stanley Robinson, purported interviews and charts and mocked-up newspaper images and X tweets, the story of the destruction of the west through climate change and human stupidity. It's really good - and (as the author says) plausible and unsettling.

What I'm reading now:

In nonfiction, Lawless: How the Supreme Court Runs on Conservative Grievance, Fringe Theories, and Bad Vibes by Leah Litman. So far it's a little heavily steeped in pop culture references for me, which means references to pop culture I'm only familiar with through osmosis, but it's interesting and persuasive.

In fiction, Blood over Bright Haven by M. L. Wang. So far it feels rather cliche, though I like the worldbuilding. It reminds me very much of the cartoon Arcane.

In audio, I've just started book 2 of the Bobiverse, For We are Many by Dennis E. Taylor. It's fun!

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